Listen!

August 5th, 2009

During regular days, I seldom stop and listen. The routine, all the other things to think about and still need to be done: “Nina, please go to bed. Now!”

Last night after a great meal and being on vacation even though it was way past her bedtime, we were hanging out on the balcony of our hotel in Santa Cruz looking onto the ocean with the full moon shining down on us.

It was getting cooler and over time Nina ended up rolled up in a blanket on my lap. And she started to ask questions:

Nina: Is this how the sea sleeps?
Me: (thinking: Wow, how do you answer this?) Well, you can say so, yes.

Nina: Why isn’t the sea sleeping like Mama?
Me: What do you mean?
Nina: Well, with a blanket and a pillow?
Me: (thinking: Now, how do you answer that?)
Nina: It isn’t quiet.
Me: No it isn’t.
Nina a bit louder: Stop it!

Nina laughs: The sea doesn’t listen to me.
Me laughing too: No, it doesn’t.

Nina: It’s the beach. It’s because of the beach that the sea can’t sleep like Mama.
Me: (Smiling while envisioning the ocean turning to its side while having a blanket and pillow) I guess so.

That little exchange made my day.
Need to stop and tune into Nina more often.

Picture taken last night by Mark & Marie Finnern.

The O’Reilly Factor

July 20th, 2009

Tim O’Reilly currently has 800K+ twitter followers. He liked my Wikipedia Papers idea and tweeted about it, after pinging me that I should update my blogger profile at O’Reilly with my twitter handle. Will do, it is @finnern.

You probably would like to know what is the O’Reilly factor of being mentioned in one of Tim’s tweets?

40 re-tweets 18 new followers (welcome) within 24 hours.This is of course only one data point, your millage may vary.

The greatest of all is, that my idea of letting students improve Wikipedia pages instead of writing papers reached a lot of people. Let’s hope it gets momentum. Spread the word.

Highlands Marching Band Best of 4th of July Parade :-)

July 12th, 2009

I am still stunned, that within a month I with the help of some friendly neighbors was able to bring 20+ musicians and helpers together to rehearse three times and then march and play in the 4th of July Highlands parade. Sweet proof of how the internet can bring us closer together.

Almost 2 years ago we moved to the San Mateo Highlands [map] an Eichler community of about 550+ households. There are two centers to the community, the Elementary School and the Recreational Center with pool, small gym, playground and preschool. These community engines are the reason why we have our own 4th of July parade.

4th of July Waiting Area

This year it almost got canceled. It needed a call for volunteers and thank you Mozique Daviel and others for stepping up and making it really beautiful with the red wagons and balloons. Check out Bowling Alone if you want to learn about why these things are so rare these days.

Last year for the first time I watched the little parade. Liked it a lot and as someone who loves music and dabbles with many instruments, I was hoping and waiting for at least one marching band to come by, but there wasn’t one :-(

Where am I supposed to stand again?

I started to ask around why and people said: The kids are out of school for the summer, therefore there are no High School bands available.

The backbone of any local community are the mothers. In the highlands there not one, but two active lists run by mothers, the Highlands Parents Google Group and Highlands Parents Yahoo Group.

Start of the Highlands Marching Band 4th of July Parade

I got active on both of them, first to find out whether there is general interest and then to announces the rehearsals. I also told everyone I met about it, in the playground, at the pool, the garage sale, …

Myself I have never played in a marching band, of course I omitted that fact when I started to recruit musicians. How hard can it be? You agree on a couple of simple songs and play. Only later I realized, that it is essential to have sheet music especially if you don’t have a lot of time to rehearse together.

There We March up Lexington

What made it additionally tough was, that some of the instruments are tuned in Bb, but others in Eb or C. We needed the sheet music transposed. What makes marching band music interesting is when not every instrument plays the same note, but when the music is arranged with small variations and harmonies in different sections of the band. I was able to find a program that transposes the simple songs, but arranging a song for a marching band is way beyond my reach.

But not out of the reach of Stephen Bell, who is an elementary music teacher who joined for the first rehearsal and was then literally instrumental to the arrangement of our songs: Chasing the star, America the Beautiful, Rock-A-By.

Highlands Marching Band in Full Formation

David Solomon also joined us for the second rehearsal. He is a veteran marching band drummer and boy does that make a difference. It gave us structure and time to breath between songs.

I was also super glad that the Chen family came out in force. Father on the clarinet, daughter on the sax, son playing the trumpet and the mother Judy organizing a lot of the logistics including making and carrying our banner.

First two Marching Band Rows

Coming back from LA, I almost missed our last rehearsal, where for the first and only time we created a formation and marched around in the Elementary School Yard. That fun we had that evening alone was worth every hour that was spent leading up to it.

The last week I practiced the songsĀ  so that I could play them without needing any sheet music. I still hit wrong notes here and there, but was able to enjoy the parade a lot more.

Reluctant Leader ;-)

On the day of the parade we had 5 trumpets, 4 clarinets, 3 saxophones, 2 drummers, 2 euphoniums, 2 banner carrier and 1 flute player (hope I didn’t forget anyone.). It was amazing and we sounded amazing too, for having only been together for 3 rehearsals, actually a couple of the players joined us that morning.

It was the greatest to play sweet music together with friends and on the way bring smiles to your neighborhood.

Trumpets, Drums and Euphoniums

As rehearsed we stopped in front of the Rec-Center. When the announcer heard that we are going to play America the Beautiful he advised everyone to get up for it and people did. We played our best, people cheered and we marched on.

Our enthusiasm must have even reached the Jury and we got awarded the best of parade. My only regret is, that we didn’t make a picture with all the musicians that were still around when the winner was announced.

The whole event was one of the most fun and rewarding thing I ever did. There are 51 weeks left until the next 4th of July, enough to dust off your instrument that is buried somewhere in your garage, or even pick up an instrument at our local shop: B-Street Music and start from scratch. By June next year you will be good enough to play with us. Looking forward to it.

If you want to know what is going on or when the next gig/rehearsal is happening, please join the Highlands Marching Band Facebook group. There you will find additional links to pictures from this year’s parade.

Video of Nina’s first Bicycle Ride

July 10th, 2009

After I picked up Nina from her School, we picked up some bread, cold cuts and water for a hearty Vesper that we took on the big school yard playground across the street.

Little background to the bike: I got it from a garage sale, took the pedals off, so that she could get comfortable learning how to balance while still having both feet on the ground.

Last weekend I put the pedals back on and added the large handle to the back of the seat, so that I am able to follow and correct her worst off balance rides.

I wasn’t finished with my sandwich yet, but she wanted to continue to bike. I put her helmet back on and thought I just let her try get on the bike without me breathing down her neck, in a minute I will be there.

Next thing I know she is pedaling all over the school yard. I literally just took my cell phone, switched it to video and tried to follow her.

It was actually tough to keep up and half way through I thought: “Oh no, this will end in a crash”, and was close to grab the handle, but she was too fast. The video looks extra shaky as it was taken with my phone, she was in control the whole time.

Love her giving comments to her own ride at the end too. Excellent.

Stacey’s Bookstore Closed :-(

July 10th, 2009

I was in San Francisco the other day and there it was, Stacey’s bookstore had closed and was selling the inventory. I think that is a sad day, as this was also a place for the local community to come together.

If you look closer you can read some great quotes: Martin Luther King: History will have to record that the greatest tragedy of this so called social transition was not the strident clamor of the bad people, but the appalling silence of the good people.
Next time you are in one of your beloved independent bookstores, buy a book. I heard that Kepler’s in Menlo Park is also struggling.
Picture taken by Mark & Marie Finnern.

Lufthansa Banner Promotion Fail

July 5th, 2009
Lufhansa Banner Promotion Fail

Lufthansa Banner Promotion Fail

Stumbled on a great banner this morning while looking for cheap flights to the mother country. On the Lufthansa’s Top Offer page there was the banner to the right: $100 off your next booking.

Today is the July 5th and I overlooked the small print: *4000 codes available. Since when is there a small print on a banner ads?

I filled in my information, even dug out my Miles and More number, to be told at the end, that there are no codes available anymore :-(

Really frustrating. I feel cheated out of my personal information including my email address for nothing.

Would be so easy to avoid this frustration with a simple if clause before showing the banner: If codes-used > 4000 or date > July 5th then display_other_ad.

Lufthansa’s tag line: Online travel planning made easy is insult ot injury.

Where is Waldonna?

June 9th, 2009
Line waiting to get into the Apple WWID Keynote 2009

Christopher Allen took this picture while waiting for the Apple keynote today to be opened. Click on the picture to getĀ  the bigger picture.

What struck me is how everyone is looking the same, and in addition, I would totally fit in.

It may have been a Monday morning problem, but not a lot of smiles there either.

Where is Waldonna? Or are only guys receptive to the Apple distortion field? Seriously, I studied the picture and I see only one woman.

How come, that Waldonna is not as interested in tinkering and developing stuff? These days in any other field but Computer Science there are more women studying it than man. It is frustrating and I am happy to organize a Future Salon to tackle that problem.

Putting a Band together

June 5th, 2009

San Mateo Highlands, my hometown has it’s own 4th of July parade plus Fireworks already on the night before. It’s like a small town in the middle of the Bay Area. I love it

I am on a mission, not from God, but for maximum fun for the most people involved. I am trying to get a Ragtag Marching Band together for our parade on the 4th of July.

Remember: Music self-played is happiness self-made. That happiness is squared when you make music with your neighbors with the goal to entertain all of them at the down to earth local 4th of July parade.

SJSU marching Spartan trumpet player signed up. That made my day. You can join too.

Picture taken by Mark & Marie Finnern.

SlideShare Karaoke Toastmaster Table Tobics Mashup

June 5th, 2009

The YouTube for slides: SlideShare has a nifty little game they call SlideShare Karaoke. You put in a keyword and it randomly selects one deck of slides for you to present.

SlideShare Karaoke

If you want to improve your presentation skills, there is no better way than going to weekly Toastmasters meetings. I am at awe how well run that organization is. Read the rest of this entry »

Nina, Unicycle and I ;-)

May 25th, 2009

While Nina learns how to balance and coast on the walk-a-bike (bike where the pedals are taken off.) I took out my Unicycle today. Would be great to master staying in one place with it. Which is hard, as you have to go constantly back and forth, that my wheel is a relative big one doesn’t help with that goal.

But it really makes a huge difference to Nina and me, if we are both trying to get better at driving a bike.

The beauty is, we move at about the same pace. It was a breeze to get to Levy’s (friend of Nina’s) house, which is just on the other side of the school yard.

To take off the pedals is getting very trendy around here. If I ever find the time I will post pictures of getting a bike from a garage sale and how we converted it to a pushbike aka walk-a-bike as Nina and I like to call it.

Picture taken by Mark & Marie Finnern.